AGA 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF FISHES 



11 



[On the scales of the bonitoi 



Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts Sei., 1S50, 2, 

 238. 1850. G 



Scales shown to be intermediate between 

 ctenoid and cycloid t>-pes. the serrations being 

 merely marginal, and not extending over the 

 posterior surface. 



Remarks on species belonging to 



the genus Lepidosteus. Proc. Boston 

 Soc. Xat. Hist., 1S.30, 3, 1S2. 1850.7 



[Remarks on the development of 



air-bladdcr.s in fish] Proc. Amer. Assoc. 

 Adv. Sci., 1S.50, 72. 1S50.S 



[Some points in the anatomy of 



the Siluridaei Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts 

 Sci., 1S.50, 2, 238. 1850.9 



Ueber die Lachssippe (Salmo- 



nidfe). Tagsber. Fortschr. Nat. Heilk. 

 (Froriep) ZooZ. Abth., 1850. 1, 24:1-244. 



1850.10 



Observations on the blind fish of 



the Mammoth Cave. Amer. Jom'n. Sci., 

 1851, 2. ser. 11, 127-128. — Edinb. New 

 Philos. Journ., 1851, 51, 254-256.— 

 Tagsber. Fortschr. Nat. Heilk. (Fro- 

 Tiep)Zool. Abth., 1851, 2, 4.5-47. 1851.1 



Report on the vertebrate fossils 



exhibited to the Association. [Abstract] 

 Proc. Amer. Assoc. Adv. Sci., 1851, 178- 

 180. 1851.2 



[Description of a new Cestracion 



from China (C. zebra) and comparison of 

 its dentition with fossil shark teeth from 

 Indiana] Proc. Amer. Acad. Sci., 1853, 

 3, 65-66. 1853.1 



Directions for collecting fishes 



and other objects of natural history. 



1853.2 



Circular signed L. Agassiz, Professor of Zool- 

 ogy and Geology in the Lawrence Scientific 

 School at Cambridge, Mass. 



[Embryology of the heart in 



fishes] Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts Sci., 

 1853, 3, 65. 1853.3 



Extraordinary fishes from Cali- 

 fornia, constituting a new family iHol- 

 conoti or Embiotocidaei Amer. Journ. 

 Sci., 1853, 2. ser. 16, 380-390. — Edinb. 

 New Phil. Journ., 57, 214-217. — ,Arch. 

 Naturges., Berlin, 1854, 20. Jahrg., 1, 

 149-163. 1853.4 



Observations sur quelques pois- 



sons des Etats-L'nis. C. R. Acad. Sci. 

 Paris, 1853, 37, 184. — L'Institut, 1853, 

 21, 287. 1853.5 



Recent researches of Professor 



Agassiz. [Extract from a letter to J. D. 



Dana dated Cambridge, June 9, 1853, 

 detailing some of the results of a rapid 

 torn- from Charleston, S. C, through 

 Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana, 

 thence up the Mississippi to St. Louis, 

 Chicago, and along by the Great Lakes 

 to New York and Massachusetts] Amer. 

 Journ. Sci., 1853, 16, 134-136. 1853.6 



[Reference to a list of fishes 



found in the Tennessee River] Proc. 

 Amer. Acad. Arts Sci., 1853, 3, 70. 



1853.7 



[Remarks on new species of 



sharks discovered by the author on the 

 coast of the United States] Proc. Amer. 

 Acad. Arts Sci., 1853, 3, 63-64. 1853.8 



[Remarks on the family of Cy- 



prinodonts] Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts 

 Sci., 1853, 3, 42^3. 1853.9 



Remarlcable sexual differences shown to exist 

 in mature fish. PoeciUa and Mollienisia Cuv. 

 and Val. are really female and male of the 

 same species. Heterandria, Zygonectes. 



Additional notes on Holconoti. 



Amer, Journ. Sci., 1854, 17, 365-369. — 

 Edinb. New Philos. Journ., 1854, 57, 

 214-228. — Arch. Naturges. Berlin, 

 1854, 20, 149-162; 21, 30-34. 1854.1 



Fossil sharks of the Tertiary of 



South Carolina. Proc. Elliott Soc. Nat. 

 Hist., Charleston, S. C, 1854, 1, 4. 



1854.2 



Notice of a collection of fishes 



from the southern bend of the Tennessee 

 River, [in the state of] Alabama. Amer. 

 Journ. Sci., 1854, 2. ser, 17, 297-308; 

 353-369. Also separate. 31 p. 8°, 



1854,3 



The primitive diversity and 



number of animals in geological times. 

 Amer. Journ, Sci. Arts, 1854, 2. ser. 17, 

 309-324, — Edinb. New Philos. Jom-n., 

 1854, 57, 271-292. — Ann. Mag. Nat. 

 Hist., 1854, 2. ser. 14, 350-366. — Ar- 

 chiv. Sci. Phys. Natur., 1855, 30, 27-50. 



1854.4 



Synopsis of the ichthyological 



fauna of the Pacific slope of North Amer- 

 ica, chiefly from the collections made by 

 the expedition under the command of 

 Capt. C. Wilkes, with recent additions 

 and comparisons with eastern types. 

 Amer. Journ. Sci., 1855, 2. ser. 19, 71- 

 99; 215-231. 1855.1 



[Development of scales in gar- 

 pike and sturgeon are similar; one of 

 the points serving to indicate close re- 

 lationship of the two] Proc. Boston 

 Soc. Nat. Hist., 1856, 6, 63. 1856,1 



